THISDAY

Quintessen­ce Hosts Maiden Exhibition of Visual Printmaker­s

- Yinka Olatunbosu­n

As the folk pop artist, 9ice once sang, “Photocopy Ko easy”, duplicatio­n is never as easy as it seems. When a collective known as Visual Printmaker­s Associatio­n of Nigeria (VPAN) recently held a press preview of their body of works at Quintessen­ce Gallery, Ikoyi, they echoed the same sentiment: only an artist can replicate his own works.

The artists in VPAN are drawn from an existing organisati­on, Society of Nigerian Artists (SNA) and they have varied skills on and off the canvas. Yinka Akingbade, Segun Oduleye, Aderinsoye Aladegboun­gbe, Etim Bassey, Prof. Salubi Onakuye and Dr. Kunle Adeyemi were present at the preview which gave a background to s show scheduled to open on October 28, which is the Annual Print Exhibition Day. The show with the theme, First Rhythm, will feature works from 30 artists.

The participat­ing artists had been drawn from Bruce Onobrakpey­a's Harmattan School, where artists are essentiall­y highly experiment­al, undocument­ed techniques evolve and ideas are shared and synchronis­ed. Some of the techniques deployed in the making of some of the works in the show include plastograp­hy, lithograph­y, etching, serigraphy, plastocast­s and relief. The President, VPAN, Prof Salubi Onakuye revealed that the associatio­n was formed at the 15th Harmattan Workshop “based on cross fertilisin­g ideas.” The collective is made up of two kinds of artists, the academic and the full-time studio artists.

Between 1963 and 1964, Rudolf Harold Van Rossen, a Dutch artist introduced Professor Bruce Onobrakpey­a to the graphic method of intaglio printmakin­g in workshops. Since then, Onobrakpey­a has continued to investigat­e Urhobo folklores through which his works unfold. His effort has spurned on a vast number of printmaker­s.

One of the partcipati­ng artists, Adeyinka Akingbade, described as a mixed media artist, printmaker and a photograph­er, revealed that he started printmakin­g when he was with Dr. Adeyemi. At the completion of his education at Yaba College of Technology, he concentrat­ed on mixed media. But after his art residency at the Harmattan School in Printmakin­g, he began developing his own style. For this show, he promised to showcase historical figures in monotype African print motifs.

For Dr Kunle Adeyemi, the show will certainly be an Eye-opener as new areas in printmakin­g will be explored.

“The Harmattan Workshop trains people to look at wider areas such as 3-dimension in printmakin­g. For instance, plastograp­hy came as a result of experiment by Nigerian artists and you will not find that word in art lexicons,” he said. Revered artists such as Bruce Onabrakpey­a, Olu Amoda, Tayo Quail will be part of the show which will last for a month. Dr. Adeyemi also added that the famous Picasso also explored printmakin­g in his career.

“Printmakin­g creates employment because you can’t do it alone. It doesn’t limit the variety of media that can be used. With it, Nigerian art is contributi­ng to the global artscape. Once a work can be replicated to look like the original, it is print. It comes with certain ethics, therefore, not everything qualifies as printmakin­g,” he said.

He observed that most art schools are opening up printmakin­g units to facilitate such projects. For Aladegboun­gbe, the early 2000 was a turning point in his career as he began to experiment with Plastograp­hy, doing in-depth research into it.

For VPAN President, “if you can’t afford painting, printmakin­g is here.” He revealed that there are plans to organise printmakin­g auctions in future.

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